Launchd wrote:This is the petition we need 50,000 signatures on. If we can change a law and make it legal, we don't have to be at the mercy of a fortune 500 company. We, the community, can take the reigns.

And that, my friends, is the way of the Free Market, and the true American way. Bless you, sir.

nervous wrote:lmao at all the euros that think americans give a shit about their signatures.

dream's dead boys, pack it up

Lmao at the lazy tryhard who can't be arsed to read a couple of hundred words and sign for something he would greatly benefit from.

Here are our options:#1 do nothing#2 do whatever we can, signatures, facebook spam, open letters, personal letters, whatever we can think of

Which of the two options are most likely to get something done, in your humble murican opinion?None of us are delusional enough to assume the signatures make any change, but atleast we tried.

Mate the whole point is this petition will literally do nothing, that is why he is making fun of you guys.

Some of you are acting like this petition will force Blizzard into action, when in reality they don't give a shit, these things are 100% a joke lmao.

Ya it won't create a legacy server overnight, but Blizzard are still humans and seeing a large support for a specific product will linger in their minds when making decisions down the road (this could be years to a decade)

It's the same thing as me registering Libertarian and voting for the candidate chosen every election since I turned 18. It didn't get us a better president, but it helps gain traction. And now it's about to bear fruit, or be damn close to it.

If a large enough amount of people find out about this, and think it is also not OK, and make it known by petitioning as well, then it can very likely lead to change at some point.. Doing nothing a all 100% leads to nothing changing.

Anyone thinking that they aren't going to sign it because it won't do anything are like those who think their vote won't change anything. Both kinds of people are mistaken. A stick is easy to break, but many bundled together is a lot harder, if not impossible, to snap.